Writing the Trail: Five Women's Frontier Narratives

Deborah Lawrence
4.2
5 ratings 0 reviews
For a long time, the American West was mainly identified with white masculinity, but as more women’s narratives of westward expansion came to light, scholars revised purely patriarchal interpretations. Writing the Trail continues in this vein by providing a comparative literary analysis of five frontier narratives---Susan Magoffin’s Down the Santa Fe Trail and into Mexico, Sarah Royce’s A Frontier Lady, Louise Clappe’s The Shirley Letters, Eliza Farnham’s California, In-doors and Out, and Lydia Spencer Lane’s I Married a Soldier---to explore the ways in which women’s responses to the western environment differed from men’s. Throughout their very different journeys---from an eighteen-year-old bride and self-styled “wandering princess” on the Santa Fe Trail, to the mining camps of northern California, to garrison life in the Southwest---these women moved out of their traditional positions as objects of masculine culture. Initially disoriented, they soon began the complex process of assimilating to a new environment, changing views of power and authority, and making homes in wilderness conditions. Because critics tend to consider nineteenth-century women’s writings as confirmations of home and stability, they overlook aspects of women’s textualizations of themselves that are dynamic and contingent on movement through space. As the narratives in Writing the Trail illustrate, women’s frontier writings depict geographical, spiritual, and psychological movement. By tracing the journeys of Magoffin, Royce, Clappe, Farnham, and Lane, readers are exposed to the subversive strength of travel writing and come to a new understanding of gender roles on the nineteenth-century frontier.
Genres: Nonfiction
170 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
2 (40%)
4 star
2 (40%)
3 star
1 (20%)
2 star
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by Deborah Lawrence

Lists with this book

West with the Night
Out of Africa
My Journey to Lhasa: The Classic Story of the Only Western Woman Who Succeeded in Entering the Forbidden City
Trailblazing Women Adventurers
535 books • 179 voters
Letters of a Woman Homesteader
Tomboy Bride: A Woman's Personal Account of Life in Mining Camps of the West
We Pointed Them North: Recollections of a Cowpuncher
The Old West in First Person
263 books • 46 voters
The Diary of a Young Girl
A Writer's Diary
The Unabridged Journals of Sylvia Plath
Women's Journals and Diaries in History
469 books • 212 voters
My Ántonia
The Grapes of Wrath
Little House on the Prairie
The Great Plains
308 books • 136 voters